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Music Science Technology

Scientists Have Discovered a Shape That Blocks All Sound (fastcompany.com) 179

Scientists have developed an "acoustic meta-material" that can catch certain frequencies passing through the air and reflect them back toward their source. When a loudspeaker was placed into one end of a PVC pipe with a 3D-printed ring of the metamaterial, the ring "cut 94% of the sound blasting from the speaker, enough to make it inaudible to the human ear," reports Fast Company. From the report: Typical acoustic paneling works differently, absorbing sound and turning the vibrations into heat. But what's particularly trippy is that this muffler is completely open. Air and light can travel through it -- just sound cannot. The implications for architecture and interior design are remarkable, because these metamaterials could be applied to the built environment in many different ways. For instance, they could be stacked to build soundproof yet transparent walls. Cubicles will never be the same.

The researchers also believe that HVAC systems could be fitted with these silencers, and drones could have their turbines muted with such rings. Even in MRI machines, which can be harrowingly loud for patients trapped in a small space, could be quieted. There's really no limit to the possibilities, but it does sound like these silencers will need to be tailored to circumstance. "The idea is that we can now mathematically design an object that can blocks the sounds of anything," says Boston University professor Xin Zhang, in a press release.
You can see a demo of the noise cancellation device here.
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Scientists Have Discovered a Shape That Blocks All Sound

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  • by viperidaenz ( 2515578 ) on Tuesday March 12, 2019 @09:14PM (#58265336)

    If it lets through normal air flow, can it be used for engine exhausts?

    • by viperidaenz ( 2515578 ) on Tuesday March 12, 2019 @09:19PM (#58265358)

      rtfa: yes it allows air flow.

    • If it lets through normal air flow, can it be used for engine exhausts?

      Not just exhausts, but intakes too. Intakes often have all kinds of stupid silencer junk. And I just replaced a turbo silencer with a straight pipe and now when I get on it the Sprinter sounds like it's in a field of crickets because of turbo noise. I replaced it because it came apart at the seam, but if it were round then it wouldn't need a seam.

    • by PPH ( 736903 )

      Honda fart cans!

    • by Okian Warrior ( 537106 ) on Tuesday March 12, 2019 @09:53PM (#58265472) Homepage Journal

      *sigh*

      Since the editor and submitter didn't do it,

      here [eurekalert.org] is the BU research alert, which includes an image [eurekalert.org] of the new material, and

      here [aps.org] is a link to the published paper, from which you can get a DOI number if you want to read about their work.

      The acoustic suppressor looks like thick a 3-d printed bushing.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        So they are cancelling sound... but not air flow. ... Even though that is literally the same thing.
        I can only guess that it is a low-pass filter.

        And the speakers emanated an "irritatingly high-pitched" "screching", but "you would see the loudspeaker's subwoofers thrumming away".
        Which one is it?
        A single driver, or a whole loudspeaker with a tweeter and a woofer?
        I can only gues the author messed up.

        And the articles are all way too vague. I wish I could imagine, how a ring would block a pressure wave going th

        • So they are cancelling sound... but not air flow. ... Even though that is literally the same thing.

          Not really, sound is vibration waves in the air not the flow of air. If it was you wouldn't be able to hear much down wind of you.

    • by jrumney ( 197329 )
      The sound is reflected, it doesn't just disappear. The echo chamber inside your engine could experience some undesirable effects from all the resonance if the sound does not find somewhere else to radiate out from.
      • You just have to get larger muffler bearings and tune the oscillating resonator...

      • Go look into something called "resonant turbocharging" -- you can use this to increase the charge pressure without moving parts.
      • The sound is reflected, it doesn't just disappear. The echo chamber inside your engine could experience some undesirable effects from all the resonance if the sound does not find somewhere else to radiate out from.

        So you didn't RTFA. If you did, you wouldn't post a comment like this.

        The basic premise is that the metamaterial needs to be shaped in such a way that it sends incoming sounds back to where they came from, they say.

        • The sound is reflected, it doesn't just disappear. The echo chamber inside your engine could experience some undesirable effects from all the resonance if the sound does not find somewhere else to radiate out from.

          So you didn't RTFA. If you did, you wouldn't post a comment like this.

          The basic premise is that the metamaterial needs to be shaped in such a way that it sends incoming sounds back to where they came from, they say.

          Yeah, that's what reflected means. It's going to bounce off whatever it came from, maybe back the same way again and it will run out of energy after a few trips but it's probably not going to reflect directly back and could go off any way depending on what's producing the sound in the first place.

          Sending it down a tube is one thing, there's only one way to go but try it in a complex machine and see what happens.

        • Maybe you should try a dictionary. The definition of "reflect" should be in there, even if the word "gullible" is not.
    • by gl4ss ( 559668 )

      engine exhausts yeah and .. I guess there's some designs like that in some cars tail ends already.

      what I'm more skeptical about is turbines and drones and such. as sound is generated on the airflow hitting the outside air anyways. and input side.

      and surely if it worked for that well right now, they would have used that as a demo instead of a speaker. just silence a lawnmower or something.

    • If it lets through normal air flow, can it be used for engine exhausts?

      * looks at aftermarket muffler industry *

      Uh, it doesn't look like people want to actually quiet that product...

      • If it lets through normal air flow, can it be used for engine exhausts?

        * looks at aftermarket muffler industry *

        Uh, it doesn't look like people want to actually quiet that product...

        One of the articles I read said it doesn't allow sound through- by reflecting the sound back. So if the muffler isn't making sound on the outside- and the sound is reflected back- that means the sound will likely be louder to the people inside the car.

        • by Shotgun ( 30919 )

          No. Not all the people in the car. Just the ones inside the exhaust pipe. But, who cares about them anyway?

  • That's the first application that come to mind.

  • They are tuned to reflect the exhaust back at the piston to increase the compression... At least in model airplane engines that used alcohol. Haven't seen one of those in a while though.

    • They are tuned to reflect the exhaust back at the piston to increase the compression...

      IME they're tuned to do the opposite, they produce vacuum so as to better scavenge the exhaust. But maybe they do both?

      • by _merlin ( 160982 )
        He's describing an expansion chamber exhaust system used on two-stroke engines with open ports. There's a brief period when both the inlet and exhaust ports are open. The exhaust system is designed so that, at a chosen engine speed, the exhaust pulse from the previous power combustion is reflected back, reducing the amount of unburned air/fuel mixture passing out the exhaust port and improving compression. See the description and animation on the relevant Wikipedia page [wikipedia.org].
        • See the description and animation on the relevant Wikipedia page.

          Wikipedia is cool, but there's more under heaven and earth [cycleworld.com] than is imagined in their philosophy. The exhaust is tuned both to promote scavenging and to increase compression.

  • by LynnwoodRooster ( 966895 ) on Tuesday March 12, 2019 @09:29PM (#58265390) Journal
    It's a band reject filter, been used in acoustics for around 100 years. A narrow-band Helmholtz radiator that cuts ~1/30th of an octave in bandwidth. So it's great for a specific tone - but not broadband. And the dimensions of the elements (neck diameter, neck length, size of constrained volume) are proportional to wavelength, so what works in the demo at 1 kHz is massive at 100 Hz - and beyond house-sized at 20 Hz. This is just someone going "oh wow they can notch out a single frequency think about the impact!" when acoustics NVH guys have been doing it for 10 decades...
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Also, -94% (aka 6%, aka -12 dB by everyone that's not retarded) is not "enough to make it inaudible to the human ear" unless you started out as quiet as "Light leaf rustling, calm breathing" (10 dB).

      If something wants to claim to make sound "inaudible to the human ear," it really needs to at least -120 dB (aka -99.9999999999% for dummies).

      • by Anonymous Coward

        6% is 16.6 times = 24.4 dB, but agree - nowhere makes anything inaudible.

        120dB is a million times, only -99.9999% - but again, you are correct - you need this level of damping to acheive "inaudible"

        • by jbengt ( 874751 )
          Your numbers are for the amplitude of the sound wave. I'm assuming they're talking about sound power or sound pressure, since we hear sound pressure, not amplitude. In that case:
          10^(dB/10) converts from dB to a multiplier of sound pressure.
          10* log10(P1/P0) converts from a multiplier of sound pressure to dB.
          -10 dB reduction results in 10% of the sound.
          -20 dB reduction results in 1%.
          Assuming a 94% reduction means a reduction to 6% of the original sound, we're talking around -12 dB, which is significant,
      • Came here to say that. Should be top post.
      • by gl4ss ( 559668 )

        their demo video uses "microphone voltage".
        0.05 with their damper and 0.25 without.

        also the article quite clearly speaks of needing modelling for different sounds so it's not "any sound" but that it can be tuned for "any frequency".

    • by oic0 ( 1864384 )
      I was wondering how they could cover a broad range of frequencies with a donut and read the article looking for any mention of frequencies. Nada.
    • Link to the paper (Score:5, Informative)

      by paazin ( 719486 ) on Tuesday March 12, 2019 @10:47PM (#58265582)
      Here's the paper published in Phys. Rev. B 99 in case anyone is interested: https://journals.aps.org/prb/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevB.99.024302 [aps.org]
    • by jandjmh ( 66714 )

      Yep, Put some pink noise on that speaker instead of a pure tone, and I bet you could barely hear the range that was notched out.

    • So only taking out one band does little, but cant mufflers be designed as a trumpet? You basically blow a mess of noise resembling a tone into one end, and it adds its energy to a single tone via standing wave in tube out the other end. It must direct all energy into that output, there is no way a trumpet is a bandpass filter, since the output tone sounds so much louder than the input, let alone the input muted through a bandpass filter.

      Right?

    • The shape is a little more convenient than a Helmholz resonator for making a ventilating barrier.

  • by Jason Straight ( 58248 ) on Tuesday March 12, 2019 @09:31PM (#58265404) Homepage

    Works for me.

  • NSFW (Score:3, Funny)

    by rmdingler ( 1955220 ) on Tuesday March 12, 2019 @09:34PM (#58265420) Journal

    I'm not sure of the name of the shape, but when we were younger, my wife could sit on my face so that I couldn't breathe... nowadays, I can't hear the stereo.

  • Put up or shut up. File your patent and post the STL. I'll test it in a few hours lol.
  • Screw HVAC, can I please get this in the data center !?!?

  • by Can'tNot ( 5553824 ) on Tuesday March 12, 2019 @09:49PM (#58265466)
    The article doesn't mention the limitations of this, but I'd expect that it would only work over a fairly narrow range of wavelengths. And the way it's designed doesn't seem to allow for the use of multiple rings calibrated for different wavelengths...

    That said, high pitched sounds are easy to block with (relatively) thin insulation. If this could be made to block the lower end of the spectrum, without the large amount of insulation which that normally requires, I could picture this as being a nice development. Or if you have a mono-toned source of noise, like in the demo. I don't think that's very common though.
    • by gl4ss ( 559668 )

      it reflects the soundwaves back though, so you'll still need insulation somewhere on the box...

      • I had assumed destructive interference, though this only works in one direction. So yeah, you'd still need some insulation. I dunno, I'm struggling to see a use case for this.
  • by misnohmer ( 1636461 ) on Tuesday March 12, 2019 @11:21PM (#58265632)

    Sounds like a helical version of this: http://www.deicon.com/tuned-ac... [deicon.com]

  • So, theoretically, if one were to wrap one's wife in this material, then he wouldn't be able to hear her insist that he take the garbage out during the 4th period of the Warrior-Rockets game?

    Asking for a friend.

  • Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Wednesday March 13, 2019 @12:16AM (#58265752)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Yeah it sounds like existing tuned acoustic absorber concepts. http://www.deicon.com/tuned-ac... [deicon.com]
    • The energy would go where most of the energy in fuel goes period, heat. It's not like a turbofan is short of cooling air flow.

    • don't look for this to be on aircraft anytime soon... that's my prediction.

      My understanding of the phenomenon - which may well be wrong - is that it is already being used in acoustic dampening around aircraft engines, at least according to Wikipedia [wikipedia.org] which says:

      "Helmholtz resonators are also used to build acoustic liners for reducing the noise of aircraft engines, for example"

  • The everpresent hum of central AC is very calming. As long as the outdoor temperature isn't expected to drop below 55, I turn it on in fan mode most nights as a white noise generator. At work it keeps stress low, whenever they turn it off for maintenance the silence throws everyone off.

    • Hang on tight, I'm working tangential to your comment on AC sound...

      Funny you mention that, I'm addicted to fans.

      Living room, bedroom, cubicle; all have fans. Car, fan on high most of the time.

      I believe I get 20+ hours of fan every day.

      Unless it's terribly hot I camp without a fan (I camp a lot). Of course a chorus of crickets is quite similar to the drone of a fan. Winter is a test in silence, because:

      I also have tinnitus (permanent ear ringing - stupid teenager, too many concerts, too little ear prote

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • I wouldn't mind the Dyson fan for in the living room to move air but not have to increase entertainment volume to compensate for the noise. But, yes, they are stupid expensive.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • literally night and day

    Science in 2019, ladies and gentlemen, they LITERALLY produced NIGHT AND DAY

  • by technosaurus ( 1704630 ) on Wednesday March 13, 2019 @02:02AM (#58265952)
    Like the diesel electric trains, the Chevy Volt (IIRC), is only powered by electric motor. The gas engine only provides electricity to the motor/batteries, thus allowing it to operate at the most efficient engine speed when the battery is low. Since it only operates in a very narrow range, the exhaust can be finely tuned for that frequency. From what I have heard though, there is still room for improvement in this area... I'd really like to see a Sterling engine version though
  • What? I'd say their biggest breakthrough is finding that 94% = 100%.

  • 94% looks like a lot. But the ear hears logarithmic. It is equivalent to a reduction of 12 dB for a specific frequency.

    If a talk to you, the sound is around 60 tot 70 dB. A reduction of 12 dB gives a sound of 48 to 58 dB. You can still understand me speaking.

  • See, I have this rooster that won't shut up...
  • Come on, everything about this thing has been known for centuries (theories go back to Newtons time) and the fact that it (logically) can only work for a single frequency means it is completely useless for blocking broad spectrum signals.

    None of the proposed use cases are going to work with this thing since it only filters a single frequency and almost all noise sources have a bandwidth to them. The proposed applications are simply idiotic given what this thing does.

    Moreover, the statement that it will "cut

  • Maybe useful as a highway sound barrier? Either as a replacement for the current walls to allow airflow, or in addition to.

  • You just know this isn't go to take the world by storm (for some as yet undisclosed reason) when the first press release you encounter is blathering on about silencing MRI machines for the benefit of people who are allergic to synthetic earplugs, and who can't, unfortunately, use the ones made out of solid steel, either, because of the intense magnetic fields.

    Marketing person grappling with harsh reality: Gee, the HVAC people have all the volume, whereas the MRI people have all the money.

    Probable end result

  • Jesus fuck, Slashdot editors. Did you fail basic elementary school math as well?

  • Wives, politicians, brat kids, crying babies that people take to restaurants etc?
  • Wonder if this would work for noise cancelling headphones too? It seems like its a ring that can be made smaller too: https://www.eurekalert.org/pub... [eurekalert.org]

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